What You're Eating – Details, episodes & analysis

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What You're Eating

What You're Eating

FoodPrint.org

Arts

Frequency: 1 episode/38d. Total Eps: 31

Simplecast
Whether it’s a salad, a hamburger or your morning egg sandwich, the way your meal gets made has an impact. What You’re Eating is here to help you understand how your food gets to your plate, and see the full impact of the food we eat on animals, planet and people. Host Jerusha Klemperer is the Director of FoodPrint.org, a website that uncovers the problems with the industrial food system, and offers examples of more sustainable practices, as well as practical advice for how you can help support a better system, through the food that you buy and the system changes you push for. From practical conversations with farmers about the true cost of raising chickens to tips from chefs about how to reduce kitchen waste to discussions with policy experts on the barriers to sustainability, FoodPrint’s new podcast covers everything from the why to the how.
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Apple Podcasts

  • 🇩🇪 Germany - food

    18/07/2025
    #83
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - food

    17/07/2025
    #69
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - food

    16/07/2025
    #48
  • 🇩🇪 Germany - food

    15/07/2025
    #34
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - food

    23/06/2025
    #96
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - food

    22/06/2025
    #89
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - food

    21/06/2025
    #76
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - food

    20/06/2025
    #51
  • 🇺🇸 USA - food

    20/06/2025
    #87
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - food

    21/05/2025
    #79

Spotify

    No recent rankings available



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RSS feed quality
Good

Score global : 79%


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Cruel & Unusual: Veal, Foie Gras, Octopus

Episode 23

mardi 14 mai 2024Duration 59:29

There are a lot of ways to raise animals for consumption — and while some would argue we shouldn’t be eating animals at all, others advocate rooting out the cruelest practices, the ones that cause the most suffering. But how do you measure cruelty? Do some animals deserve to suffer less than others because they’re especially cute or smart? And does your right to enjoy a fancy or delicious meal trump the right of an animal to not experience extreme cruelty? In this episode, we look at three controversial foods — veal, foie gras and octopus — and the campaigns launched by animal rights activists to stop their production and consumption. These foods and the animals they come from have a lot to teach us about the ethics of animal agriculture — and possibly about ourselves.

This episode features Daisy Freund, Vice President of Farm Animal Welfare at ASPCA; Cheryl Leahy, Executive Director of Animal Outlook; and Dr. Elena Lara, Senior Research and Public Affairs Advisor at Compassion in World Farming.

What You’re Eating is produced by Nathan Dalton and FoodPrint.org, which is a project of the GRACE Communications Foundation. You can find us at www.FoodPrint.org where we have this podcast as well as articles, reports, a Food Label Guide and more.

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook,  X and Threads

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

And if you’re enjoying the podcast, consider leaving us a positive review.

Vanilla and Chocolate: Foundational Flavors

Episode 22

mardi 30 avril 2024Duration 51:45

Vanilla and Chocolate — the two most beloved flavors in the world — have been linked since the beginning. Both products, the vanilla bean and the cacao pod, originated in Mexico, thousands of years ago, where Aztecs used vanilla to make the bitter cocoa powder in their sacred chocolate drink more palatable. Today these two flavors, in both natural and artificial form, dominate our dessert options, from ice cream scoops to the sweet snacks in grocery aisles. But both have complicated stories: long and hidden supply chains, an extraction of wealth from communities in the Global South, and all of the environmental and social problems that come from a system that leaves smallholder farmers in poverty. How can we reconcile our love of these essential flavors with their often problematic production? Can we hold large companies accountable?  And is it possible to produce vanilla and chocolate in a different and better way?

This episode features Jennifer Boggiss of Heilala Vanilla, Tim McCollum of Beyond Good, and Allie Brudney from Corporate Accountability Lab. 

What You’re Eating is produced by Nathan Dalton and FoodPrint.org, which is a project of the GRACE Communications Foundation. You can find us at www.FoodPrint.org where we have this podcast as well as articles, reports, a Food Label Guide and more.

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and X

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

And if you’re enjoying the podcast, consider leaving us a positive review.

Endless Shrimp

Episode 13

mardi 13 décembre 2022Duration 53:32

Americans love shrimp. And one of the exciting developments of the past 20 years or so is that shrimp has gotten really affordable. It used to be a luxury food in the form of shrimp cocktails served at a steakhouse or a fancy wedding. Something for special occasions, slightly out of reach.

Today, shrimp is the number one most popular seafood in America, and as the price point has come way down, it’s become a staple, not just of affordable restaurant chains offering all you can eat, but also in our homes. Every supermarket offers giant frozen bags of it, with the heads and shells already removed if you want, sometimes uncooked, sometimes already boiled or breaded and fried. And it’s sometimes as little as $6 per pound. In today’s episode we talk to experts to find out how and when shrimp became so cheap. And why.

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

Unwrapping Food's Plastic Problem

Episode 12

mardi 29 novembre 2022Duration 59:40

Single-use food packaging is one of our thorniest problems. We need a safe and convenient way to get food home from the store, and we need easy ways to eat and drink on the go. How can we do that in a way that does not create so much waste? How can we do it in a way that does not put our bodies at risk from the harmful chemicals and additives used in so much of that packaging?

In this episode we look at food packaging, with a focus on plastic, since there’s so much of it, and it’s the one with the most problems. We dig deep into plastic production and its connection to climate change. We talk to experts about how food packaging is problematic not just for the environment, but also for our health. Is there a solution? Is there a future that could exist that was not dominated — and polluted — by plastic?

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

The Many, Many Labels on Your Eggs

Episode 11

mardi 15 novembre 2022Duration 53:41

In the past decade, demand for eggs has grown, but the kind of eggs we are looking for has changed during that time, too. Consumers are eager to know if the chickens had enough space to move around. Were they cage-free? Free-range? Pasture-raised? Organic? In response to those questions about where those eggs come from and how those hens lived out their lives, egg cartons and the labels and claims on them are working overtime to tell us a story. On today’s episode we look at the many labels on your carton of eggs and dig into what they mean and what they definitely don’t mean.

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

The Power of Big Pork

Episode 10

mardi 1 novembre 2022Duration 59:51

There was a time when bacon was a “sometimes” food, occasionally paired with eggs at breakfast or in a summer sandwich with the season’s freshest tomatoes. But then, suddenly, bacon was everywhere, from fast food burgers to ice cream to scented candles. And while the peak might have passed, bacon has settled comfortably onto menus and into our home kitchens for much more than breakfast. 

In this episode we look at where bacon mania came from, and dig a little deeper into this beloved food and the industry behind it. We look at the realities of industrial pork production and how the world’s obsession with pork — bacon on everything! — contributes to the environmental degradation and hollowing out of rural communities in pork producing powerhouse states like Iowa, Missouri and North Carolina.

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

The Milks You're Putting in Your Coffee

Episode 9

mardi 18 octobre 2022Duration 53:43

For the longest time milk meant cow’s milk — usually whole but maybe skim or 1% depending on how old you are. But today, walk into some independent chains and if you don’t specify what kind of milk you want in your latte, you’ll get oat milk. You know, the stuff that mama oats feed their baby oats.  Or, at a Starbucks, or a neighborhood cafe, you might ask for a coffee with milk and have the barista say “what kind of milk?” And depending where you are, that list of possible answers could include almond, oat, pistachio, macadamia, soy…the list goes on and on. 

In today’s episode we explore the foodprints of the various options you have to make your coffee a little creamier. What are the production issues with each? What do you gain or lose by choosing one over the other? We talk to experts about dairy farming, almond farming, oat production and more— as well as coffee professionals who are shaping the landscape change in real time— all to help you get to the bottom of your coffee cup.

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

New episodes of What You're Eating coming soon

lundi 3 octobre 2022Duration 01:36

We’re back, this fall, with all new episodes to help you understand how your food gets to your plate, and see the full impact of the food system on animals, planet and people. We’ll continue to uncover problems with the industrial food system, and offer examples of more sustainable practices, as well as practical advice for how you can help create a better world, through the food that you buy and the system changes you push for.

Have you been wondering why people are drinking oat milk instead of cow’s milk?
Or curious how you’re supposed to choose which eggs to buy when there are so many to choose from?
Or frustrated by the amount of plastic packaging your food comes in?
Or wondering what labels to look for to know which food is best for the environment?

From practical conversations with farmers and chefs to discussions with policy experts on the barriers to a just and sustainable food system, What You're Eating covers everything from the why to the how.

Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, and follow along every other week for new episodes, and more answers to the questions you have about what you’re eating.

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

Centering Ohlone Food and Culture

Episode 8

mardi 10 mai 2022Duration 42:18

For our episode, The Big Problem of Food Waste  we interviewed Vincent Medina and Louis Trevino who co-founded mak-‘amham, an East Bay organization and restaurant focused on reviving and strengthening traditional Indigenous Ohlone foods and sharing them back with their communities, as well as educating the public about Ohlone culture through cuisine. The restaurant was originally housed in the courtyard of Berkeley’s University Press bookstore that shuttered a few months into the Coronavirus  pandemic. Now, two years later, Café Ohlone will be reopening on the UC Berkeley campus.

We were only able to share a small portion of our interview with Vincent and Louis for our food waste episode, but the full interview was so interesting and they were so engaging that we decided to run it in its entirety now, for our final episode of season one.

Cafe Ohlone will open in June, 2022 at UC Berkeley's Hearst Museum. "A portal of light and shadows, singing trees, a dry creek running along redwoods, a shellmound rising in a fragrant garden of abundance...  learn more about what Vincent and Louis are calling 'A love song to Ohlone culture'  at their website makamham.com

What You’re Eating is produced by me, Jerusha Klemperer,  Nathan Dalton and FoodPrint.org, which is a project of the GRACE Communications Foundation. Special thanks to Vincent Medina and Louis Trevino.  You can find us at www.FoodPrint.org where we have this podcast as well as articles, reports, a Food Label Guide and more. 

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

Thanks so much for joining us for season one and if you like the podcast, please leave us a review on Apple, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

The Search for Sustainable Salmon

Episode 7

mardi 26 avril 2022Duration 52:42

Depending on who you are, your connection to salmon may be spiritual, cultural or just a matter of taste. If you live in the Pacific Northwest, you might be familiar with and appreciate wild salmon, but for the rest of us, our love of salmon avocado rolls reflects a love of farmed salmon. Because yes, most of what you’re eating is farmed, whether you realize it or not.

Today on What You’re Eating, we look at America's favorite fin fish, salmon, and dig a little deeper into where it comes from, what’s farmed, what’s wild, and why some people want you to care about that distinction at all. We get into the details of fish farming — of salmon, and other fish, too — and how it replicates some of the problems we see in land-based factory farms for animals like chicken and pigs. We also ask the experts where we can buy wild salmon, any labels to seek out, how to make it more affordable, and how best to cook it.

Follow @foodprintorg on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter

Stay Informed. Get the latest food news, from FoodPrint.

And if you've been enjoying this show we hope you'll leave us a review on Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.


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